
Congressional Information & the Internet A Collaborative Examination of the House of Representatives and Internet Technology May 8, 2007 Collaboratively Authored by the openH house project A project of Sunlight Foundation Executive Summary Congress can expand the impact and functioning of the full range of its work by recognizing the transformative power of simple technological reforms that can create an open, public and fully transparent institution. This in turn can create a civically empowered and meaningfully aware public and enable a connection between constituents and legislators that can deepen the national discourse. To address the coming opportunities and challenges of an increasingly connected political environment, Congress should engage in an ongoing discourse with the public and commit to creating a truly transparent legislature. The Open House Project—a collaborative online project of the Sunlight Foundation—has identified the following as providing opportunities for reform: • Legislation Database—publish legislative data in structured formats • Preserving Congressional Information—protect congressional information through archiving and distribution • Congressional Committees—recognize committees as a public resource by making committee information available online • Congressional Research Service—share non-partisan research beyond Congress • Member Web-Use Restrictions—permit members to take full advantage of internet resources • Citizen Journalism Access—grant House access to non-traditional journalists • The Office of the Clerk of the House—serve as a source for digital disclosure information • The Congressional Record—maintain the veracity of a historical document • Congressional Video—create open video access to House proceedings • Coordinating Web Standards—commit to technology reform as an administrative priority Acknowledgments This report is the direct result of a thoroughly collaborative effort by a broad coalition of participants from left and right with substantial backgrounds in media, government, information technology, blogging, and public policy. Each step of the report’s production has been open and participatory, from choosing topics through conversations on a list-serve, to researching House institutions and reforms through blog posts and a wiki, to authoring sections of the report with collaborative documents online. Preparing the report with the input of an entire community has informed it with the perspectives of a diverse group of contributors. In addition to simply soliciting the input of experts and stakeholders from various fields, the project has brought together technological and institutional expertise, opening a space for vital discussions and collaboration. Through the Open House Project, relationships are developing between Web developers, government information experts, Congressional staff, non-profit organizers, and Representatives. By permitting disparate fields to inform each other in creating a community report, the Open House Project will affect the technological systems and products of the House, and also the organizational capacity of the greater transparency community. This project seeks to empower the relationship of citizens and Congress. Its recommendations are just the first step in this process. The ongoing strength and impact of the project rely on continuing community participation -- from members of Congress, congressional staff and citizens. The Open House Project welcomes feedback on its recommendations at theopenhouseproject.com. Members of the Open House Project who specifically contributed to crafting these recommendations include David All, The David All Group; Robert Bluey, The Heritage Foundation; Paul Blumenthal, the Sunlight Foundation; James Jacobs, FreeGovInfo.org; Tim La Pira, the Center for Responsive Politics; Perla Ni, VoterWatch; Ari Schwartz, the Center for Democracy and Technology; Matt Stoller, MyDD.com; Josh Tauberer, GovTrack.us and John Wonderlich, the Sunlight Foundation. A full list of contributors is on the Open House Project Web site at http://www.theopenhouseproject.com/about/. We thank them for their time and dedication. 2 Table of Contents Executive Summary.............................................................................................................. ..........1 Acknowledgments.................................................................................................. ........................2 Table of Contents............................................................................................................... .............3 Open House Project..................................................................................................... ...................4 Legislation Database............................................................................................................... ........9 Preserving Congressional Information................................................................................ ..........15 Congressional Committees.................................................................................. .........................20 Congressional Research Service.............................................................................. .....................26 Member Web-Use Restrictions............................................................................. ........................31 Citizen Journalism Access................................................................................... .........................37 The Office of the Clerk of the House.............................................................................. ..............41 The Congressional Record............................................................................................... .............48 Congressional Video.................................................................................................... .................51 Coordinating Web Standards..................................................................................................... ....55 3 Open House Project Introduction and Summary of Recommendations Citizens have a difficult time understanding Congress. Many institutions have evolved to connect constituents with the complex body of information essential to their democratic self-determination. Americans rely on the news media, interest groups, libraries and direct communication with lawmakers to stay informed about their legislature. While these communication channels operate quite effectively within the spheres of their function, they are not without their drawbacks. As society’s developing appetite for political information stretches these institutions to their full potential, their limitations become clearer. Traditional means of sharing congressional information are incapable of fully serving the needs of an increasingly aware society. Cost, popular appeal, equal access, comprehensiveness, timeliness and accuracy are all variables traded against one another as each news access point determines the identity of its unique service. Comprehensive coverage may be chosen at a prohibitive cost, or popular appeal may be given priority over measured analysis. The inherent limitations of the traditional media force lawmakers to focus on controlling a narrative, often granting priority to the theatrical over the substantive. Legislative realities are only partially integrated into election politics, decreasing accountability and granting undue influence to monetary concerns. The legislative and the electoral should not be so distant from each other. The Internet has the potential to change the way Congress and constituents interact. Emergent forms of political technology online are leaving behind traditional constraints and redefining the role of legislative information in our society. As congressional information becomes more readily accessible online, representatives’ legislative and electoral work come closer to merging. An empowered citizenry can be more confident in its federal legislature when transparent processes discourage corruption and increase accountability—politicians’ work is free to be the legislative task at hand when the country better understands what politicians do. There now exists a unique opportunity for Congress to earn the public’s trust. The transformative potential of free and open access to influential data has inspired the creative analysis and presentation of political information, now being utilized by large communities of civically engaged Web users. The emergence of new forms of civic engagement online brings the opportunity to reconsider the manner in which the House of Representatives makes itself visible online. Internet technology has enabled Web designers to make political and legislative information available and useful to less experienced observers, and the public’s capacity for meaningful oversight and awareness is increasing as a result. By embracing the promising potential of new social and 4 technical realities online, the House can meet halfway citizen organizers, transparency advocates and Web designers. The Internet’s potential does more than create a new set of responsibilities and expectations. If new technology will serve to better connect constituents to Congress— effectively spreading civic responsibility throughout society—it follows that the burden of designing and implementing online transparency reform will, similarly, be shared between Congress and an online community of civic technologists. Since
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